The first mistake that all new Analysis Services Tabular developers make is this one: they create a new project in SSDT, they connect to their source database, they select the tables they want to work with, they click Import, and they then realise that trying to load a fact table with several million rows of data into their Workspace Database (whether that’s a separate Workspace Database instance or an Integrated Workspace) is not a good idea when they either end up waiting for several hours or SSDT crashes because it has run out of memory. You of course need to filter your data down to a manageable size before you start developing in SSDT. Traditionally, this has been done at the database level, for example using views, but modern data sources in SSAS 2017 and Azure Analysis Services allow for a new approach using M.

Here’s a simple example of how to do this using the Adventure Works DW database. Imagine you are developing a Tabular model and you have just connected to the relational database, clicked on the FactInternetSales table and clicked Edit to open the Query Editor window before importing. You’ll see something like this:

…that’s to say there’ll be a single query visible in the Query Editor with the same name as your source table. The M code visible in the Advanced Editor will be something like this:

At this point the query is importing all of the data from this table, but the aim here is to:

Filter the data down to a much smaller number of rows for the Workspace Database

Load all the data in the table after the database has been deployed to the development server

To do this, stay in the Query Editor and create a new Parameter by going to the menu at the top of the Query Editor and clicking Query/Parameters/New Parameter, and creating a new parameter called FilterRows of type Decimal Number with a Current Value of 10:

The parameter will now show up as a new query in the Queries pane on the left of the screen:

Note that at the time of writing there is a bug in the Query Editor in SSDT that means that when you create a parameter, close the Query Editor, then reopen it, the parameter is no longer recognised as a parameter – it is shown as a regular query that returns a single value with some metadata attached. Hopefully this will be fixed soon but it it’s not a massive problem for this approach.

Anyway, with the parameter created you can now use the number that it returns to filter the rows in your table. You could, for example, decide to implement the following logic:

If the parameter returns 0, load all the data in the table

If the parameter returns a value larger than 0, interpret that as the number of rows to import from the table

Here’s the updated M code from the FactInternetSales query above to show how to do this:

The FactInternetSales query will now return just 10 rows because the FilterRows parameter returns the value of 10:

And yes, query folding does take place for this query.

You now have a filtered subset of rows for development purposes, so you can click the Import button and carry on with your development as usual. Only 10 rows of data will be imported into the Workspace Database:

What happens when you need to deploy to development though?

First, edit the FilterRows parameter so that it returns the value 0. To do this, in the Tabular Model Explorer window, right-click on the Expressions folder (parameters are classed as Expressions, ie queries whose output is not loaded into Analysis Services) and select Edit Expressions:

Once the bug I mentioned above has been fixed it should be easy to edit the value that the parameter returns in the Manage Parameters pane; for now you need to open the Advanced Editor window by clicking the button shown below on the toolbar, and then edit the value in the M code directly:

Then close the Advanced Editor and click Import. Nothing will happen now – the data for FactInternetSales stays filtered until you manually trigger a refresh in SSDT – and you can deploy to your development server as usual. When you do this, all of the data will be loaded from the source table into your development database:

At this point you should go back to the Query Editor and edit the FilterRows parameter so that it returns its original value, so that you don’t accidentally load the full dataset next time you process the data in your Workspace Database.

It would be a pain to have to change the parameter value every time you wanted to deploy, however, and luckily you don’t have to do this if you use BISM Normalizer – a free tool that all serious SSAS Tabular developers should have installed. One of its many features is the ability to do partial deployments, and if you create a new Tabular Model Comparison (see here for detailed instructions on how to do this) it will show the differences between the project and the version of the database on your development server. One of the differences it will pick up is the difference between the value of the parameter in the project and on in the development database, and you can opt to Skip updating the parameter value when you do a deployment from BISM Normalizer:

Hi Chris,
Thanks a lot for an informative post.
However, after changing the parameter back to 0 nothing really changing. Build & deploy doesn’t transfer the 1 billion but still just 10. Any idea why that is?

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As well as being a blogger, I'm an independent consultant specialising in Analysis Services, MDX, DAX, Power BI, Power Query and Power Pivot. I work with customers from all round the world solving design problems, performance tuning queries and delivering training courses, and I am happy to work on short-term engagements. For more details see http://www.crossjoin.co.uk